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AP U.S. History Exam 1.17 175 Views
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Description:
AP U.S. History Exam 1.17. How did the development described in the excerpt contribute to the continued slave trade in the United States?
Transcript
- 00:00
[ musical flourish ]
- 00:03
And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by factories,
- 00:06
workplaces with a firm commitment
- 00:09
to the truth.
- 00:10
Mm-hmm.
Full Transcript
- 00:12
All right, first up, the excerpt.
- 00:14
[ mumbles ]
- 00:18
[ mumbling continues ]
- 00:22
All right. Oh, Loom and Spindle Magazine.
- 00:24
That's an awesome mag. Yeah. Yeah.
- 00:25
All right. That was a real rag in those days.
- 00:27
All right, and now the question:
- 00:29
How did the development described in the excerpt
- 00:31
contribute to the continued slave trade in the United States?
- 00:35
And here are your potential answers.
- 00:36
[ mumbles ]
- 00:41
All right.
- 00:42
Well, after the Industrial Revolution reached the United States,
- 00:45
textile mills began to pop up across the country,
- 00:47
particularly in the slave-free states of New England.
- 00:51
Let's see what kind of an impact these new-fangled machines
- 00:53
had on the slave trade down south.
- 00:55
Did the introduction of textile machinery
- 00:57
affect the slave trade because A -
- 00:59
plantation owners earned additional money by
- 01:02
buying mills in the North?
- 01:04
Well, plantation owners had plenty of cash coming in
- 01:06
from their agricultural business,
- 01:08
so there was very little need to diversify.
- 01:10
So that's a no-go on A.
- 01:12
Did this new textile machinery impact the slave economy because
- 01:16
B - mill owners allowed their buildings
- 01:18
to be used as sites for slave auctions?
- 01:21
Huh.
- 01:21
Well, many of these mills were located in the North,
- 01:24
so their owners claimed very publicly to be against slavery.
- 01:28
So that knocks out B and C.
- 01:29
Which means that the development of new textile technologies
- 01:32
contributed to the continued slave trade because D -
- 01:35
mills relied on raw materials produced through slave labor.
- 01:39
Remember how the mill owners
- 01:40
publicly claimed to be against slavery?
- 01:42
Well, many of their products depended
- 01:44
on the southern cotton industry, which was sustained
- 01:47
by the work of slave labor.
- 01:49
Hypocrisy.com here we come.
- 01:51
Talk about a battle between bleeding hearts and corporate minds.
- 01:55
Good luck with that.
- 01:57
[ gasp ] [ how dare you ]
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